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tv   Fox and Friends Sunday  FOX News  November 24, 2019 3:00am-7:00am PST

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♪ tell yo me why ♪ ain't nothing but a heartache ♪ ain't nothing but a mistake. ed: this is where your head spins. could be pete picking a song. rachel: i want it that way. pete: this is not my song. you might think it is. back street boys just a little earlier than me. rachel: you are so bad. it is true. back street boys is totally my era. i'm not going to say what era that is.
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pete: i still know the words. rachel: they have a whole back street boys workout. pete: work out to the back street boys. rachel: a guy who loves the back street boys and he does the entire workout. pete: you will never catch me on a pel a pellaton. ed: what do you want to hear. pete: are you sick of our picks? 50's and pop music. pete: we are glad you are here. in the meantime a lot of news. we have been covering it on the news you will remember over a week ago the president announced on a friday evening that he was pardoning matt golsteyn and clint lorance and eddie gallagher acquitted of so-called war crimes
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ultimately found guilty of taking pictures with a dead isis fighter who they had killed. he issued that order. the navy took it you might say tepidly out the gate. still going after gallagher trying to take away his navy seal trident. ultimately the top honor as a navy seal someone in the navy being designated as a navy seal. on thursday the president saw that just a couple days ago and tweeted this: said the navy will not be taking away war fighter and navy seal eddie gallagher's tridentrident pin. get back to business. it appears the navy hasn't quite got that message. ed: the "new york times" has the headline navy set to proceed with disciplinary plans against eddie gallagher and what's even more remarkable is, first of all, appears to be a bit of defiance by navy officials including the secretary of
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the navy, mr. spencer. richard spencer, you know, defying the commander-in-chief. and there are reports as well, rachel, that he has threatened to resign over this. rachel: right. how unusual is this to see someone at this level, pete? pete: it is very unusual. usually what happens, if you disagree with the commander-in-chief other a substantive issue of policy, resigning is the way someone might handle it. conflicting reports as someone might mention. richard spencer the navy seals work for him. he because in november scope anovembernova scotiaand responds that he wanted to resign. >> cop contrary to popular belief i'm still here. did i not threaten to resign. let us say we are here to talk about external threats and eddie gall gear ♪ one of them. >> is the board going to to go ahead on december 2nd. if you receive the order what would the response be. >> if the president's
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response to stop the process the order stops. good orders and discipline is obey the president of the united states. >> how did the president explain to you the rationale behind restoring chief gallagher's rank? >> no. he doesn't have to. i do not interpret what the president does. i do what he says. rachel: then he doubled down on twitter. pete: yes. he tweeted. this he said i would like to further state in no way, shape or form did i threaten to resign. i serve at the pleasure of the president. i spoke to a senior administration official last night, confirmed that indeed, he said i do not want to resign. you look at this from the beginning, the president's tweet was clear, don't take away this guy's trident. the navy said and admiral green who is the head of the navy seals who said we are still going forward with this board process to strip him and other seals of their trident and it looks like because it is retribution for the fact that the president weighed in. listen, the president, as the commander-in-chief has a
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prerogative to take a different view of war fighters. hey, i don't like the rules of engagement. i want to untie the hands of guys and i'm going view the process differently. i like what richard spencer said in one process. good order and discipline is obeying the orders of the united states. that tweet might not be an official order, it's a clear commander's intent. in the military we work under commander's intent. what does he want to happen? simple clarification of this could get it done. but the navy has flaunted our commander-in-chief. and this is a big story because it's a real conflict ongoing. rachel: i have so many other questions. you are eddie gallagher on live. >> eddie will be live on set on this program at 7:30 this morning. again, ongoing legal situation. we will bring you the latest in his showdown with the navy. the president has certainly had his back so far. ed: big story. we will stay on top of it. 18-year-old surrenders to police overnight in the
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deadly shuting 6 an alabama sheriff. rachel: sheriff john williams gunned down while responding to a call at a gas station. pete: aishah hasnie mourns the loss. >> good morning pete and rachel. alabama once again losing a beloved hero this happened in lowndes county. the sheriff there john williams was shot and killed in the line of duty saturday night when he responded to a call at a convenience store in hayneville. police arrested 18-year-old william chase johnson after a four hour long manhunt. they say he drove offer in the sheriff's vehicle after shooting him and then returned to the crime scene and surrendered with a firearm in his hand. now, police have not said why the sheriff was shot, except that it was over, quote, something silly. now sheriff williams is a marine corps veteran and served his community for decades, starting as a volunteer reserve deputy back in 1978.
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his department had this to say about him. sheriff williams always wanted to make a difference in his community and felt there was no better way to help his community than to protect and serve them in law enforcement. sheriff williams is the 38th law enforcement officer killed in the line of duty this year, nationwide, and the fifth officer killed alabama this year alone. pete, ed, rachel. ed: sad story. thank you so much, icial shah. rachel: very sad. you see these people sacrificing their lives on the front lines. we saw the protests yesterday in new york over supposedly subway fares. they called themselves the blanket police protest. there is something going on here. pete: the more you allow that sentiment to fester. the more you create the space disrespect confrontation of cops is okay. ed: we have seen people pouring water and milk on
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police officers. disrespectful at a police at a time when we are losing so many law enforcement officers just a sad situation. no doubt about it. turn to 2020. kamala harris interesting because you remember where this race started. where she was seen as somebody who might come from the left and really energize liberals and get the base going, have some money from out in california. had a strong debate out of the gates? pete: yep. took on joe biden early. ed: took on joe biden early and sort of fell apart. she is looking at the field and seeing that the hard left is taken. have you bernie and elizabeth warren and everybody fighting for that so now she is trying to maybe go for one of the moderate lanes that biden, buttigieg and others want. i'm sure she doesn't have anywhere to go. folks, i'm not a socialist. watch. >> i am not going to raise middle class taxes. i'm not trying to upend and blow up systems. i'm not trying to start a revolution. i am not a socialist.
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okay? so, there you go. what i do know is this: capitalism assumes that everyone is starting out on the same base and then people will compete i and the best will rise. well, in america today, people -- the majority of people aren't starting out on the same base. and we have got to lift people up and in particular working people. and working families. ed: might work if there was a second sentence i'm not a socialist you see on the wall there the second sentence is there you go. socialism destroys economies. it's destroyed countries like venezuela. here is why i love america. give us something after that. what's the second and third system. rachel: i want to help the working class. of the working class is getting help by free market policies. so there is nowhere for her to go the democratic party doesn't want to fully embrace what actually works. donald trump has just changed the game in terms of
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authenticity. voter is sick of people who are just playing to polls or playing because there is an opening as you said on this wing of the democrat party. people are willing to accept you even making mistakes and filibusters, if it feels sincere. i don't know what you thought when you watched that. that looks like somebody who didn't know what she really thought. pete: that's been her problem from the beginning. she doesn't know who she is. she has never had a lane. i have remember she wanted to not abolish ice and then abolish ice and then she was against sanctuary cities and now for them. tough on crime. and now she is -- is she a socialist? she would have been a socialist if that was going to work for her. now she has decided she is not a socialist. if this is why you see in the real clear politics average of 2020 candidates, she is stuck right there on the far right. we don't know where she is. is she far right, far left in the middle? she doesn't know. 4% for kamala harris. you are right, ed, to points out there were a lot of hopes for her candidacy in the beginning. would she be a breakout.
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she just has not found her footing. joe biden has big name i.d. sanders and warren are socialists and pete buttigieg, an articulate guy. not sure where he stands either. ed: harris stuck at 4%. don't sleep on pete buttigieg who in the real clear politics average for iowa, which is where this whole thing starts, buttigieg is in the lead in that average. don't sleep on him. who should would he be watching on the democratic side. pete: if you are not ahead early states or national poll you are in bad shape and kamala harris is right there. rachel: we will see if kamala harris is done or not. pete: she didn't say i'm a capitalist. rachel: no. we're going to turn now to your headlines. two young boys shot to death in a school parking lot. 11 and 14-year-old found in a van in northern california. police are still looking for the shooter or shooters. they have not revealed a possible motive but have not ruled out gang activity. we could not confirm if the shootings is related to a
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separate shooting in the same neighborhood last week. judgment day in hong kong as the city holds its first election since the start of pro-democracy protests. more than 2348 votes cast surfacing the last election's total. several hours before polls close. >> express our course on freedom and ite democracy. >> call on free election. it's time for them to woke. where we still have elections. >> the first results are expected as early as tonight. vice president mike pence has returned to washington after a surprise visit to american troops in iraq. the vice president posting these pictures on twitter after making the unexpected trip. pence writing, quote: it was our highest honor as vice president and second lady to visit u.s. soldiers stationed in iraq before thanksgiving on behalf of a
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grateful nation. thank you for keeping our country safe. and those are your headlines. ed: important message to send to the troops right before thanksgiving. rachel: absolutely. ed: in the meantime shocking new text messages in the case of a college student after could you seed of encouraging her boyfriend to take his own life. despite those bombshells, she says she is not guilty. we will take you inside the case next. ♪ when we were looking for a roommate, he wanted someone super quiet. yeah, and he wanted someone to help out with chores. so, we got jean-pierre. but one thing we could both agree on was getting geico to help with renters insurance. ♪ yeah, geico did make it easy to switch and save. ♪ oh no. there's a wall there now. that's too bad. visit geico.com and see how easy saving on renters insurance can be.
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>> we are starting the long process of holding this person accountable for what we would say is egregious and reckless behavior. ed: what a case. a prosecutor speaking out after a former boston college student pleads not guilty to involuntary manslaughter. they say she pressured her boyfriend to kill himself through abusive text messages like this one reading: do everyone a favor and go bleeping kill
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yourself. the couple expand 25,000 text messages over two months. here to explain the case is the prosecutor in manhattan d.a. prosecutor's office elliott. good morning. >> good morning. ed: 75,000 text messages is a lot of the evidence. appear to be hundreds of messages that basically are very abuttafuoco. >> she basically encouraging hits over again die, go kill yourself. the world will be better off without you. doing this allegedly at a time when she knew he was in a vulnerable and depressed state. show this between messages and kill himself you got a case. ed: he wrote to the girlfriend stop telling me how worthless and pathetic i am and how much i deserve to die. that gives an idea where he is there showing this is impacting me because of my depression. stop doing this. >> right. ed: is that something that can sway a jury? >> sure, under the
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involuntary manslaughter statute they have to show wanton and reckless conduct. thousands of messages. hundreds saying go kill yourself. caused a high degree of likelihood that he would do substantial harm. so long as they can show that causal connection they have a case. ed: i'm far away on a tall place and not going to be here for long. i'm leaving everyone. and then she relies everyone, allegedly, what are you bleeping doing, if you love me stop, if you ever loved me, stop. now, we're told that those last text messages were released by her side, the defense team because it would suggest that she is saying time out. i don't want you to do this. but, how might a jury look at that down the road and how would you as a d.a., in the sense that if you send hundreds say going to kill yourself and send one at the end, oops, i shouldn't have done that. can that sway a jury just that one text message? >> it's certainly relevant. and her defense lawyer she has has a pr firm workings for her. look, look at the big picture. it was a toxic relationship
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in both directions. ultimately hundreds of messages. massachusetts one of the few states that doesn't have a specific coercion of suicide law but they had a similar prosecution michelle carter case two years ago, successful prosecution. the prosecutor has said the evidence in this case is stronger than it was in that case. ed: going to be a fascinating case to watch. we appreciate the inside and the information from the inside from elliott. thanks for coming. >> in my pleasure. ed: thanks for coming. >> in thank you. ed: baby boomers expected to put 21 million homes on the market in the next 20 years. the question is who is going to buy them. two real estate experts say millennials don't want to buy. that's next. ♪ ♪ ♪ who says you can't go home ♪ who d about 15 minutes for us to do this. blends right into the italian architecture. no no no no no!
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pete: welcome back. couple of quick headlines for you, aides for michael bloomberg say he won't accept any political donation and would not take a presidential salary if elected. that, despite the fact that former new york city mayor and multibillionaire has not officially declared his candidacy yet. we'll see. half in, half out. and andrew yang wants msnbc to remember that he is in the race. yang tweeting he won't appear on the network until he gets an on air apology for what he calls unfair
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treatment. he tweeted in part, quote: they think we need them. we don't. yang grew frustrated at msnbc after the debated where he was given significantly less speaking time than his rivals. rachel in. rachel: thank you, pete. a tidal wave of homes will be hitting the market across the country according to a new report. 21 million homes will be put on sale by baby boomers by 2037. the question is who will buy them? here to react is real estate co-founder and ceo dolly linz managing director jenny lens. thank you both for being here. >> thank you. >> thank you. rachel: who will buy these homes. >> the younger group whether they're called millennials or generation x's or whatever you want to call them. they will have to address the glut and prepare for it. so it's really a question of preparation every gel decade
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something changes. some in phoenix have to sell. rachel: i have been to sin city. i'm an arizona girl. been to sin city. for those that don't know this is a community for senior living as they die or move in with their kids because they can't live at home anymore or go to, you know, nursing homes what do they do lower the age. >> they have to remove the age restrictions. make it more fun, more hip. add schools, add playgrounds for younger families. reboot. >> it was an original idea in 1950. had to prepare for me. >> catering for the older generation. that's going to have to change. otherwise see a lot of ghost towns around the u.s. rachel: when they polled millennials a lot of them say they want to rent or they plan on renting, you know, indefinitely is that because they don't have enough money or do they really want to own their own
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homes the way prior generation had that dream? >> i think in general the american dream is alive and well. people do want to observe. the problem is the down payment plagued with student debt. there is just so many issues mortgage rates down 3.66%. down 100 base points since last november. if they can't afford the down payment that's not going to help. rachel: student debt isn't going to help. private investors coming in buying these homes and then renting them out? >> they did last time that could happen bike blackstone or individual owners could be smart about it. how can i prepare? what steps can i take? >> sell now. >> sell now before the glut. >> the boomers can sell now or decide i'm going to stay in my home and the exit strategy might to be rent. rachel: i think a lot of young people, it's partly the down payment but also they don't want the maintenance. they're not like prior generations in that regard. >> but they are buying
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condos. jenny just bought a condo. rachel: good job, jenny. >> they want equity. resting is money down the toilet. >> and it is. >> they want to know where their life is going. they just need to wait until they see yeah, i want to stay in this town 10 years. rachel: there is something about owning something. >> right. it feels good. and you get to renovate it. >> get to paint the walls. make it your own. rachel: hgtv stuff going on all the time over there i'm with you on that. >> economy is good. all signs are good. stock market is united great. economy is good. not only is it high employment, it's good employment. right? finally wage growth. so, people are optimistic and optimistic goes a long way. people have to be smart and plan. >> we see confidence play. >> yeah. rachel: interesting. i don't think a lot of people were thinking about what's happening with boomer home. >> they weren't. that's a great article.
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"wall street journal" did a great job. rachel: thank you for giving us more insight on that. >> thank you for having us. rachel: happy thanksgiving to you. >> you too. thank you. rachel: delay of game climate protest students storming the field harvard yale matchup. next guest was there and calls the protest selfish. stay with us. t manufacturing j. it's a competition for the talent. employees need more than just a paycheck. you definitely want to take advantage of all the benefits you can get. 2/3 of employees said that the workplace is an important source for personal savings and protection solutions. the workplace should be a source of financial security. keeping your people happy is what keeps your people. that's financial wellness. put your employees on a path to financial wellness with prudential.
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♪ oh, ho! oh, ho, ho, ho! you... you got me. uh, what do you want? i've got uh, ai robots, i've got vr goggles. i want your sled, please. no. [ chuckles ] timmy. it'd be a shame if this went viral. for those who never compromise. the mercedes-benz winter event. whoa. he was pretty good this year.
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♪ i want to put on my boogie shoes and boogie with you. >> it's your shout of the morning bernie sanders putting on his boogie shoes during a new hampshire campaign stop. >stop. ed: the vermont senator dancing with senators. including one of his favorites, apparently abba. >> i love abba. is that ages me or what. having the time of my life. he looks like he is having fun. i like it. ed: exactly. pete: he has been finding physical activities that he can do to show us he is vigorous. good for him. next he has to go leaf surfing. ed: the wor sloot has social in it. pete: he loves climate change as do these other folks. one of the oldest traditions in the country, 136th harvard-yale game was
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delayed when hundreds of climate changes activists swarmed the field to protest. >> teams originall fans emergedh sides. a protest of some sort. and took a seat at the midfield area. announcement has been made to ask them to clear the playing surface. as of yet, we are in a delay. ed: next guest actually attended yesterday's game of the harvard students d.j. lacy who joins you now with more. good morning, d.j. >> good morning. thanks for having me. ed: what was it like to play out. you are going to see a football game and all the sudden it becomes a climate change protest. >> yeah. i made the trip down to new haven with a grouch my friends. we were coming down to watch a great game of football. it was 136th edition of the harvard-yale game. one of the oldest rivalries in college football. unfortunately the game was politicized. and hijacked by these
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student protesters. around 150 students. 500 others joined. refused to leave. the game was delayed. so i think there was a level of disrespect and it was shown by these protesters. rachel: how long was the game delayed by? >> the game was delayed by about an hour. ask someone in the stands. it really changed the whole entire dynamic of what was going on on the field. pete: dj can you confirm everyone who protested arrived to that protest on a bicycle? >> i cannot confirm that, no. certainly not. pete: at the end of the day, did you go to watch a football game. is this the kind of thing you see on campus every day, harvard, yale, students who are going to get an education in the greatest country on earth, but they have decided that climate change is the single biggest issue they care about? >> yeah. well, unfortunately, this is not the first example of
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disrespectful and disruptive form of protest from these students. this is something i have covered with the institute -- leadership institute campus reform. just last year, this same group disrupted a speech by harvard president larry bac backow. it is unfortunate that we see protests from students that go to universities, pride themselves on raising the next generation of american leaders. ed: dj this happened at the yale campus. yale stadium. i saw people social media as a punishment maybe yale next year should be required to start at least one of the protesters in the football game and each game next season. what do you think about getting some of these protesters out there. have them play a little football? i wonder if they could do it? >> that certainly would be an interesting form of punishment for these students. but i think it is important to point out. this game should have been about the players in the first place. for them, this is one of the biggest football games of the year. and this is a culmination of months of hard work and,
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unfortunately, these protesters divided to politicize this event and kind of steal the spotlight from them. and the headlines were seen this morning about the protests rather than what actually happened in the game which i think is very unfortunate. rachel: ruin ago football and also pointless if they really cared about climate change they would go protest in front of the chinese embassy. >> certainly. there is certainly much better ways to go about this. great to be passion naught about a cause. there is an appropriate way to advocate for change and the spectacle that we saw yesterday was certainly not that. ed: preesmght coming in. pete: i love ed's idea. lace them up and go at each other in a football game. ed: yale would be punished. turning to your headlines. ruth bader ginsburg back in the hospital. admitted to johns hopkins for chills and a fever. expected to be released as early as this morning. ginsburg has had two separate bouts with cancer in the last year.
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forcing her to miss some court sessions in january for the first time as a supreme court justice. a woman making a shocking discovery on her doorstep. an abandoned one-i do old baby. >> as soon as i opened my door. i sought baby. like his little foot was sticking out of the box. i saw him wiggle his foot. >> it hurt my heart. you know like why would you do that? >> oh wow, the newborn was crying when neighbors noticed him wrapped in a blanket inside a shoe box as you heard. baby taken to an orlando florida hospital and is okay. unclear if the women who found him know the mother. the mayor of newark, new jersey, reportedly banning homeless people from being sent over by nearby new york city. the "new york post" reporting the new york city council passed the mayor's that prohibits new york from sending homeless people under mayor bill de blasio's assistance program. that gives qualified homeless people help with moving expenses. new jersey is saying no thanks. take a look at this. a man in a wheelchair making
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his way up and down a rock climbing wall with ease. canadian woody bell four was born with cerebral palsy he hasn't let that stop him from getting into sports. inspirational video shared by the texas governor greg abbott who added this caption never quit, never give up. overcome any challenge. remember, abbot has used a wheelchair since the 1980 after a tree fell on him. very inspiring story from both of them. rachel: that was amazing. pete: could rick reichmuth do that. rick: i was wondering where you were going. no. that was amazing. everyone to get where they want to go this week a lot of storms we are going to deal with none of them are going to cause massive problems. kind of anoint storms we have. one storm dealing with across the east coast
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bringing showers across florida. this is the front. it's going to move throughout south florida by the end of the day today. cool temperatures down especially for tomorrow and in towards tuesday. and then here you government this is the big mess we have across the northeast. we will see some big delays. i think for at least the first half of the day today and residual delays later on. then take a look at monday. monday looking really pretty good across the country. tuesday we start to see some moisture coming up across the central part of the country. and snow across areas of the central rockies. areas of nebraska. it's going to be a swath of snow cutting from northeastern colorado up through wisconsin. wisconsin, rachel, getting some snow in towards wednesday. and then we go towards thursday. thanksgiving day and a big storm come in across parts of the west. big rain in southern california. explain southern arizona. and snow across the higher elevations. that will cause some delay us. none of this is going to make problems for your thanksgiving travel. watch out because we have a series of smaller storms moving across. guys?
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>> did you perk up, rachel? rachel: my sister is flying in on wednesday wisconsin. ed: maybe she should fly on wednesday. ry. rick: pretty hardy. rachel: we are from arizona. i'm used to it now. pete: we're sorry to rachel's nonhardy sister. thanks, rick. appreciate it. still ahead, israel's prime minister charged in a series of corruption cases. but our next guest says the crimes he is accused of don't even exist in the western world. so what does the future hold for b.b. netanyahu? we will discuss coming up next. ♪ fun fact: 1 in 4 of us millennials have debt we might die with.
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ed: some quick football headlines on this sunday. mason rudolph fined $50,000 for that ugly brawl a couple weeks back. in all 33 players were fined on both teams. rudolph tried ripping myles garrett hell not off after a tough hackel. responded by actually ranking rudolph's helmet off and bashing him in the helmet with it. garrett has been suspended indefinitely. and in college football, number six oregon play off hopes take a big nit a shocking loss 31-28 to arizona state. number two ohio state stays unbeaten. it was a game for a while but they outlasted eighth ranked penn state 28-17. and number 4 georgia surviving a bit of a scare from texas a&m beating the aggies, 19-13, go dogs, pete? >> yes. and lsu still rolling. this week the attorney general of israel forming a panel to decide b.b.
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netanyahu's political future. israel's prime minister facing corruption charges which he denies and calls an attempted coup. our next guest argues the lack of any evidence of a quid pro quo echos what is happening here in the u.s. eugene is director of the policy forum and expert on israeli arab conflict. he joins us now to explain. eugene, thanks for being here this morning. we really appreciate it. a lot of folks in the states are confused by what's happening in israel. they see these charges of the prime minister. what does it mean? >> the charges are based on crimes no one has ever been accused or prosecuted of before. they are basically saying because netanyahu discussed favorable media coverage with. so media magnates he would say you should really cover me better or they would say maybe we will cover you better. that, itself, constitutes bribery. simply discussing favorable media coverage with the press and a politician, those two talking about
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their coverage in the media which the press and politicians do all the time isn't itself taking of a bribe even if nothing is prom milled in return and clear in this situation nothing is delivered in return. it's making a crime out of talking to journalists. pete: our president has on -- many occasions tweeted about the coverage he gets, favorable or unfavorable. you are saying that alongside some gifts of champagne and cigars and other things are ultimately what they are trying to do. because they want to get rid of p.b. netanyahu. longest serving prime minister there. his opponent ising will looking for anything they can get. >> clear from the timing this is designed to depose the prime minister without a trial. because, this announcement was made on the first day of the 21-day period where neither netanyahu nor his opponent form a government and up to form a government. that 21-day period where governments can be put together by anyone, including b.b., that is the unique window where they dropped this indictment,
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making it extraordinarily hard for b.b. to participate in that coalition formation is designed to keep him out of the government and we know the attorney general and the prosecutor think that he should not even be allowed to try the former government even though nothing in the constitution says that they are trying to get him out of office. the actual trial and the prosecution is beside the point. pete: we hear words like deep state in the united states. i have gotten a crash course in israeli politics. there is something very similar. >> there the deep state there is even deeper. the attorney general is not a hand-picked by the prime minister. he can't really be removed by the prime minister. all of the leading prosecutors are career civil servants and they say they are not working for the government. they say they are working for the rule of law it's a professional bureaucratic class with its own priorities and own values that is trying to remove a prime minister even though the constitution in israel clearly says you only need to step down once you have
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been convicted. pete: professional bureaucratic class taking on a duly elected prime minister. we know a little bit about that in the united states. briefly, the u.s. move to deem settlements in judea and sumaria not to be illegal how significant is that? >> it's extraordinary accomplishment by the trump administration. there has been this carter era memo sitting around since 1978. adopted by the carter administration to pressure israel and tribute cricketed to this narrative that it's a war crime for jews to live in the old city of jerusalem, to live in jewish historic areas. that idea has always been wrong as a matter of law. but no one went to the bureaucratic fight of getting rid of this state department policy. and what this shows is at a time when the media wants us to believe that trump is now turning his back on israel because of the kurds in syria or something like this, that trump is no longer a friend of israel. what this shows is trump is still the most pro-israel president ever.
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and has an agenda to continue to solidify u.s.-israel relationships and getting rid of the bad dynamic of the middle east peace process actually stopped peace from occurring. pete: makes sense to me. alongside moving embassy. big moves. we appreciate your time. >> thank you. pete: incredible moment caught on camera. a colored blind boy sees color for the first time. [laughter] >> what are you thinking? look pretty cool? hey, come here. come here, dude. >> wow, brings chills every time. up next, meet the young boy and school principal who helped make his dreams come true. that's next. ♪ ♪ you make my dreams come true ♪ ♪ a's name. so we're in this little town near salerno
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>> think are all yours. see what it does. [laughter] >> what are you thinking? look pretty cool? >> he is crying. >> that's awesome. hey, come here. come here, dude.
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ed: such an incredible moment caught on camera. a colored blind boy sees color for the first time thanks to special glasses given to him by his school principal. rachel: joins us with the school principal who made it all happen. scott hanson, welcome to you both. jonathan, tell us what was that like to see for the first time in color and explain to us the emotions that came over you. >> when i first saw color, everything kind of like popped and started to like attack me. and then i started crying because i was full of joy and a little bit of sadness because i haven't seen this my whole life. rachel: you said it was sort of you felt like you had missed something. >> yeah. i just -- i wondered why i missed out on this my whole
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life. ed: jonathan what did you see before the glasses on and what do you see now when the special glasses are on? can you describe for us the two different world? >> without the glasses on, everything dull and mellow and. it's kind of dark. and then when i put them on, everything like pops out and it like it's just amazing. pete: scott, as the principal your job is to want to change lives every day. to be a part of something so specific in that moment, talk to us about why you did this and what it means to you. >> you know, first of all, ed, rachel, and pete, thanks for having us on, you know, being an educator is one of the best things in the world and to capture those mommy's in the classroom to see a student, you know, so overjoyed and overwhelmed with emotion, you know, that was one of the greatest days of teaching in my life. you know, that's who we are as educators is that we want to spread love and care and
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joy and, you know, give these kids an opportunity to grow up in a world and make the best of themselves. and that's what excites us as educators. rachel: john, your mom actually set up a go fund me page get you para glasses. i know scott you gave jonathan your glasses and your mom set up a go fund me page to get your own. tons of people have donated and she is going to give the extra money there to other kids who are colored blind and in need of glasses; is that right? >> yeah, it is. rachel: do you know how much money has been raised? >> >> i think like an hour ago like $20,000 he had they'd is incredible. sings the glasses are a few hundred bucks. that's incredible. we have a link go fund me. incredible. pete: thanks for what have you done. appreciate it. >> thank you so much. rachel: happy new
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thanksgiving. pete: see the coshocton -- corn. top military officials may be resigning over his case. we will bring you that next. you don't know my name, do you? (laughs nervously) of course i know your name. i just get you mixed up with the other guy. what's his name? what's your name? switch to geico®. you could save 15% or more on car insurance. could you just tell me? i want this to be over. easy twist design.r. optimum control. introducing the all-new nutribullet blender combo. one blender with endless possibilities.
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♪ ♪ make my decision ♪s that my prerogative rachel: i love that about you. pete: britney is amazing. she is the song bird of our generation. rachel: she is. i'm really surprised that you are a britney fan i love that. pete: she is fantastic. i stuck with britney through. rachel: thick and thin. pete: there was the shaved head moment. the baseball bat. i was still right there. he
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had song bird of our generation. pete: when was that? 2007. i was still there song bird of our generation is from step-brothers. another great movi. ed: i any it was 2000 late. pete: you don't love britney. if you watch the program on weekends you will probably hear more brittany spears. rachel: i love brittany spears. she has a great insta by the way. pete: what? rachel: instagram. maybe i am younger than you. pete: what is insta? ed: chief officer eddie gallagher on set 7:30 eastern in the middle of this big controversy. you thought maybe it was over after the president had restored his rank. but now it looks like initially some navy officials were pushing back on the idea of not disciplining him. now they may be. pete: the president made his
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commanders' intent very clear. the navy has decided to create a conflict. i just saw eddie gallagher in the green room. is he a little fired up about it. we will see what he says at 7:30. ed: a lot of the president's supporters fired up about impeachment as well. wrapped up week two of the public impeachment hearing. a lot of people thought maybe it's over then, at least that phase. then they will have to turn it over to the house usual area committee and democrats have to put up or shut up. are they going to move forward on articles of impeachment or not? hold on a second. adam schiff doesn't want to quite leave the stage and hand it off to judiciary. we are not foreclosing the possibility of additional depositions or hearings. but we are also not willing to wait months and months and let them play rope adope with us in the courts i is suggesting he wants to get mic mulvaney and others who have not come forward. the question really is will the democrats move forward on impeachment or not? do they have enough? have they proven impeachable offenses? because there are white house officials now saying they want a trial. they want to call the
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whistleblower as a witness. they want to call hunter biden and calling the democrats' bluff do you really want a trial a we don't think you found impeachable offenses. you won't be able to remove the president from office and we will embarrass a lot of democrats. rachel: time your candidates running for office are going to need. meanwhile, a lot of stuff that's not getting done. usmca trade deal. national definition. gun safety legislation. prescription drug prices. infrastructure,. ed: these are lots of things both parties said they wanted to do. pete: immigration. rachel: by the way, biggest challenge we have, china. you are diminishing the president and weakening his hand at exactly the time he has china over the ropes and trying to make a deal with them. there is a lot of things that i think the american people are looking at and they will have to decide whether adam schiff is wasting the american time or not. pete: in the army we say you are supposed to train to standard not train to time. adam schiff right now is of
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course training to time. he knows the clock is ticking. 2020 is coming. okay. if i can get somebody. in i will still investigate them. we have got to wrap this impeachment up because we we have to get it done by 2020. ed: here is thanksgiving nowhere close. bottom line here is the president pushing back. adam schiff will be compelled to testify should the democrats decide despite the fact that my presidential conversations were totally perfect the president says again and again to go forward with the impeachment hoax. pollpolls have now turned very strongly against impeachment and to the president's point on friday several polls filtered in week two of the hearings going on. and among other things they showed that independent voters, many of these polls, independent voters, the swing voters that democrats needed to sort of turn against the president are turning instead against impeachment and saying they didn't see impeachable offense. rachel: it's interesting. because the president is saying bring it on. here is hogan gidley last
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night on "justice." >> i talked to the president about this in the oval office across the resolute desk and said hogan, the democrats have nothing here. i have done nothing wrong. if they proceed with this sham illegitimate proceeding, i want a trial in the senate. i welcome a trial in the senate. and i want to call all the witnesses we didn't have the right to call in the house side. obviously the senate is the only place where i can get fairness and receive due process under the law. but the witnesses i want called -- and he named them. i want adam schiff. i want the whistleblower. i want hunter biden. i want joe biden. pete: if you are going to go this way the president believes then i will have my day in court. it will be senator lindsey graham as the chairman who set the rules and call the witnesses. i will get a chance to defend myself and cross-examine and bring all the dirty laundry the democrats have not wanted to talk about this entire time. if you are going to go this way, which i don't think you should. there is offramp in the house. you could do a sen sewer or something less.
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they probably won't. they are too invested. ed: chief justifiable john roberts who would ultimately be ruling on a lot of that but you are right. rachel: i would say there is the process that you guys are talking about and then there is the politics. a lot of democrats out there that wonder why republicans despite all the flaws that democrats definitely see in the president, whatever they see, they wonder why republicans like donald trump. it's this kind of pro-shadow. it's, you know, he is not backing down. he doubles down. is he a fighter and he fights, bring it on. i will call your bluff. that's why they like him. republicans didn't used to act like that. pete: you are totally right. adam schiff saying the investigation which america loved is over. might keep on going. more depositions. rachel: i don't care how the rates are let's keep on going. pete: that's how people
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feel. mueller, now more schiff? ed: saturday go to a football game and get your mind off politics go to the harvard-yale game a big tradition. what happens? football? no. actually a climate change protest breaks out and disrupts the game. a number of democrats though thought somehow this is a great idea, yeah, let's just disrupt the football game. pete: of course. ed: alexandria ocasio-cortez activism disrupts the president to change the future. bernie sanders jumped in. when people come together to stand up for justice, we win. congratulations to the young people demanding a sustainable future for our planet. we are with new this fight. and elizabeth warren would not be outdone. i support the students, organizers and activists demanding accountability on climate action and more at #harvard-yale. climate change is existential threat she says, and we must take bold action to fight this crisis. rachel: those three tweets in my opinion is exactly why the democrats are going to lose. they are so out of touch. nobody else in america thinks you should interrupt a football game to watch a
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bunch of elitist, privileged kids take over a field and delay a game. that is why they will lose. pete: the mob is running the show for democrats. rachel: out of touch. pete: of course, they are completely out of touch. as i have said before and climate change is a religion for the left. rachel: yes. pete: they believe it to be -- it's bigger than world war ii. the world is going to end in 10 years. as a result, anything is justified, including this feels like small ball to them because they think it should be bigger and even more consequential but you are right. as america tunes in to watch football on espn and most people watching, you know, like lsu and georgia. so some people watched harvard and yale. as they tune in to watch this, they see this. and it's a moment when the lunancy of the ivy league campus comes into their television set and then they look -- they watch how people react and these frontrunners in the democrat party. this is great. this is what i want.
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ed: democrats go all in. we talked to somebody at the game. opposite view. why are you breaking up a football game? watch. >> this should have been about the players in the first place. for them, this is one of the biggest football games of the year. culmination of their months of 45rd work and unfortunately these protesters decided to politicize this event and kind of steal the spotlight from them. and the headlines we are seeing this morning are about the protest rather than what actually happened in the game. which i think is very unfortunate. there is certainly much better ways to go about this. it's great to be passionate about a cause. way to advocate for change. spectacle we saw yesterday was certainly not that. pete: ed had a great suggestion in the last hour. these climate change activists should lace them up and take on each other. ed: happened at yale stadium. yale should have to take on some of the climate activists on their team. see what they do. pete: they call that soccer i'm sorry. rachel: i'm going to tyke a
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hard turn on the headlines, starting with fox news. 18-year-old surrenders to police overnight in the deadly shooting of alabama sheriff alabama sheriff. gunned down while responding to a call at a gas station. william johnson shot and killed the sheriff before stealing his patrol car. he returned three hours later and he surrendered. williams was a marine veteran and served as sheriff for nearly a decade. he is the 38th officer shot and killed in the line of duty this year. prince andrew now under the microscope of the fbi according to the sunday times of london. the agency wants to grill the prince about his relationship with jeffrey epstein. sources told the paper that prince andrew would be, quote, happy to cooperate with the investigators. he stepped away from his official royal duties last week. president trump ordering park rangers to help secure the southern border. rangers from at least five national parks would be temporarily relocated to arizona and texas to help
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border patrol stop drug traffickers and illegal immigrants. more on the plan next hour when we are joined by acting deputy secretary of dhs ken cuccinelli. check this out. tourists are getting a kick out of this -- out of these buffalo riding police officers. look at that mowpghted atop a giant water buffalo, they patrol the streets of a brazilian island. there is about 450,000 water buffalo on that island. more than its entire human population. and those are your headlines. pete: that's pretty awesome. i mean,. rachel: i didn't know they were tame enough to do that. pete: i didn't either. ed: pretty fun. still ahead the president's attorney rudy giuliani calling out joe biden and his whole family ties to ukraine during a wide ranging interview yesterday. he's calling the former vice president a liar. >> he says i don't know my family's business. he says it so often he is starting to sound like indicate corgodfather.
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we're related to them? we're portuguese? i thought we were hungarian. can you tell me that story again? behind every question is a story waiting to be discovered. this holiday, start the journey with a dna kit from ancestry. this holiday, start the journey with a dna kit i'm a verizon engineer, and i'm part of the team building the most powerful 5g experience for america. it's 5g ultra wideband-- --for massive capacity-- --and ultra-fast speeds. almost 2 gigs here in minneapolis. that's 25 times faster than today's network in new york city. so people from midtown manhattan-- --to downtown denver-- --can experience what our 5g can deliver. (woman) and if verizon 5g can deliver performance like this in these places... it's pretty crazy. ...just imagine what it can do for you. ♪
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>> are you afraid, mr. mayor that you could be indicted. >> do you think so i'm afraid? i did the right thing. i represented my client in a very, very effective way. the moment i heard biden's name i told my colleagues they are going to try to kill me. because they will kill the messenger. but, damn it, the mafia couldn't kill me. your colleagues are not going to kill me. ed: strong words from rudy giuliani firing back in exclusive interview saying he is not afraid to be indicted as he takes on joe biden accusing the former vice president lying of family business ties to
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ukraine. fox news contributor former u.s. attorney andy mccarthy is here to talk about it. he is the author of ball of collusion. good to see you, andrew. >> hi, ed, how are you? ed: fantastic. what did you think about the former mayor firing back here and saying, look, the reasonable why i'm under fire, basically, is because i'm telling the truth. i'm pointing out that joe biden and hunter biden have a real problem. >> well, i think, ed, what this shows is that the strategy on -- in the trump camp is that they want to make sure that what people understand what they were interested in investigating what happened in 2016. the main allegation against the president at the moment in connection with this ukraine thing is that he was solely and only focused on the bidens for purposes of 2020. that is, you know, positioning himself against his potential rival in the campaign. and i think their position, that they want to come back at that with is that this
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was actually all about getting down into what actually happened in 2020. and justifying that the position that the president had nothing to do with collusion. nothing to do with russia. and they were probing the ukraine part of that story. ed: more to the point of joe and hunter biden, isn't rudy giuliani making a fair point that the democrats have made this all about process and what did rude do and what did he not do when they don't want to investigate burisma, how hunter biden got all this money, and whether or not joe biden, who is overseeing ukrainian policy for president obama was pulling strings as burisma was being investigated? >> yeah. this goes, ed, to really the unfairness much what went on in the house. if you remember the very first hearing not the slate of hearings that we had in the last week. if the in the beginning, when they put the director of national intelligence on, adam schiff did that parody
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version of the trump zelensky call. what he says there is i want you to make up dirt on my political opponent. and then what schiff and the democrats did was deny the republicans the ability to show no, no, no. the president wasn't asking anyone to fabricate a case or make up dirt. he was asking for examination of something that cries out to be examined. which was what was going on with the bidens and burisma, which you know, maybe there is crime there. maybe there is not. it's certainly something that warrants investigation. ed: might finally be looked at if there is a senate trial. i have 30 seconds. you have op-ed about the first glimpse into horowitz's fisa report. horowitz of course the inspector general at the justice department. 30 seconds. are top people at the fbi and the justice department going to finally be held accountable? >> i don't know. you know, the impression i get, at least from the media reporting, we will have to see what horowitz actually says, their position now seems to be trump? trump? you thought we were
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investigating trump? this doesn't have anything to do with trump. that was the george papadopoulos investigation or it was the carter page investigation. i don't know where you guys get off trump. what are you talking about trump? so, that seems to be what the picture is going to be. we will have to see what horowitz actually has to say for himself. ed: seems unbelievable as you suggest. they weren't looking at candidate donald trump. what do you mean? weren't doing that meanwhile surveilling campaign advisor. andy mccarthy, appreciate you coming in. trash on the sidewalks. high homicide rate and poor school performance. what are baltimore leaders doing to fix the city in the president has been talking about this for a long time. now, baltimore responds. they say they will ban plastic bags. should that really be their top priority when there is other big problems? we will discuss next. ♪ think about what you are trying to do to me ♪ freedom ♪ freedom ♪
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xfinity customer service simple, easy, awesome. not my thing. pete: time for news by the numbers. first one in three that's how many shoppers can expect to have their christmas packages stolen by porch pirates this year? a research report finds about 36% of americans have had a package stolen at least once.
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one in three. next, $12.3 million. that's about how much this mason thanksgiving day parade will cost this year. the smart shopper says that includes 16 giant balloons. a thousand clowns and 26 floats helping offset the cost of this major sponsorship. $1.30 per pound. that's how much it will cost to buy that thanksgiving turkey u.s. farm bureau says turkey prices at their lowest level in 2010. thank you, trump? i don't know. ed: give the president credit, right? rachel: that sounds good. democrat hopeful joe biden claims to have fee -- claims to have female running mate in mind seems to have a tough mind remembering who they are. take a look. >> incredi incredible number of qualified women. not just people running. can i start naming people the press will think.
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former assistant attorney general got fired. assistant of delaware. delaware. the women who should have been the governor of georgia. two senators from the state of new hampshire. there is enormous number of qualified people. >> here to weigh in g.o.p. candidate from maryland seventh's congressional district kimberly klacik. good morning, kimberly. >> good morning. ed: joe biden wants to tell women is he so supportive and he may have a running mate but he can't quite maybe remember their names. >> i feel so bad for joe biden. he is losing it. someone is writing his scripts. every script that he does, interview or debate. someone has written it. so if they didn't include names he probably doesn't remember any. so, with the left in their playbook as we know. they pander to people and they believe if they recognize you by group, that somehow is a solution to your problems. you can see buzz words and women rights, gay rights, anything inclusion. even though rights are up
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for grabs and no one is being excluded but they know if they say these buzz words that everyone is going to listen and it's okay. rachel: kimberly, baltimore has a very high suicide -- homicide rate. they also have very low school performance. very low high school graduation rates. and right now they are concentrating on plastic bags? >> yeah. this is so embarrassing because we do. we are fifth year in a row hitting over 300 homicides and we are up 120 shootings. we are at 724 shootings this year, which is up so much since last year. and i have to say this is what they decide to focus on. they are banning plastic bags, styer row foam, plastic straws because they don't have an actual solution to our problems. that's why i'm running for congress this year. and i hope the people in district 7 and in baltimore city decides to pick some republicans so we can get relief. ed: showing video that you shot. the president noticed that some months ago of course as
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you remember better than anyone, because you were pointing all this out. the congressman at the time was elijah cummings. he has now since passed away. and the president and others have mourned him and certainly his legacy. we see new that video. in 30 seconds, what would you hope to do to clean up the city if you are elected? >> absolutely. so, the abandoned homes, hosmost of them owned by the city is a problem. people squattin squat in them wh addiction. eyesore. blight. a lot of those problems could go to people in the neighborhood and actually they could own some of these properties and do something about this. when you invest in your community, then the community pro prospers. until they get that investment going, nothing is going to happen. i plan to do something about the education system and i plan to do some audits over there. right? we have so much money, federal funds going into baltimore city but someone has lost it or they are not using it properly. ed: kimberly klacik, thanks
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for coming. >> in thank you so much. rachel: happy thanksgiving. >> you too. ed: a story "fox & friends" has covered from the beginning. eddie gallagher's battle to clear his name. reports that top military officials may be threatening to resign over the case? rachel: chief petty officer gallagher is here to react next. ♪ ♪ it's time to sell or trade in your car. with truecar, just enter your license plate and see your car's value in real time. sports package and low mileage? nice. within minutes, you'll have a true cash offer, and you can head to a dealership and get paid, today, right now.
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pete: we are back with a fox news alert. update in the case of new year's eve seal eddie gallagher rank restored by president trump after being accused and eventually acquitted of so-called war crimes last july. new reports claim top military officials threaten to resign if the navy was not allowed to conduct an administrative review to take away his trident to determine if gallagher could remain a seal. something the navy secretary. he now denies. chief petty officer eddie gallagher joins you now along with u.s. navy veteran and nine line helping with his cause. thanks for being here this morning. >> thanks for having us on, pete. pete: you lived in the middle of this. you saw the president's tweet. allowed you to get your rank back. you reported back to duty. reactreact. >> it keeps getting more and more unreal.
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got the president's tweet on wednesday. pete: saying is he going to restore your trident. it's not being taken away from you. >> being the leader he is. at the same token i get a feeling of embarrassment for my community admiral green is letting the ego get the best and trying to take my trident all about retaliation. pete: you were found guilty on one charge taking a photograph. admiral green the head of the navy seals take to you administrative board. we want to take your trident away his boss is the secretary of the navy richard spencer. he said there were reports that he wanted to resign now is he backing away from that react to what the navy secretary had to say yesterday. listen. can you confirm or comment on this story that you are threatening to resign from your post if the navy is not allowed to sort out its own process around the navy seal
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hot president would like to promote. >> contrary to popular belief, i'm still here. did i not threaten to resign. let us just say that we are here to talk about external threats and eddie gallagher is not one of them. pete: good order and discipline is following the commander-in-chief. while a tweet is not an order. as you mentioned, his intent quite clear. why is the navy still going after you when they know what the president wants to happen? >> this is all about ego and retaliation. this has nothing to do with good order and discipline. they could have taken my trident at any time they wanted now trying to take it after president restored my rank. all the corruption going on during my case starting with crying craig miller all the way up to admiral green and just recently we come up more evidence that will be exposing next week that the secretary of the navy was actually meddling in my case and trying to get
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organizations not to support me while i was incarcerated. pete: wow. we will get to that in a moment. how did the rank and file view this? you have the brass and pentagon reacting. how are the guys who have been a part of the war for the last 18 years seeing this? >> real war fighters are discussed. if you are trying to encourage people to join the military. trying to encourage people to join the most elite forces, this is a perfect case and example of you who you can destroy that recruitment. you have an individual here served for over 20 years. want to leave the military honorably. he wants to leave with his trident. he filed all that paperwork. there is absolutely no reason from a commander's standpoint to go against the commander-in-chief's intent. president trump has said very clearly that we need to get back to business. and business is war fighting. this is persecuting a war fighter who has done untold amount of good for this country, doing bad things to bad people is part of that there was a picture that was taken. but there is 12 other individuals in that picture.
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and for whatever reason only people singled out eddie gallagher and few other people not even in that picture. pete: other people whose tridents may be taken away you believe it's because they supported you and testified on your behalf. >> that's exactly what's going on. both of these seal officers testified for me during the trial and called these mean girls out for lying. and now they are being retaliated against by the commands because they are going against the grain. pete: so today, you are still facing the navy. still facing the potential board even though the president tweeted it. what would your message be to the president about your case? you want to retire. what would you say? >> you know, i just want to retire peacefully with all the honors that i have earned. get back to my family. and, you know, i don't know how many times i thank the president. he keeps stepping in and doing the right thing. and i just want to let him know that the rest of the seal community is not about this right now. they all respect the
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president and what the admiral is doing, showing complete inel subordination is not the good example of good order and discipline. pete: when you say the seal community. you are saying the guys you have served with. >> yes. pete: have your back in this. they appreciate what the president is doing. >> they definitely do. those are the guys when i go back to work. they are coming up and giving me hugs. they are glad to see everything is working out in my favor. higher echelon, brass trying to put their thumb. pete: i didn't know navy seals gave hugs. >> bureau hugs. pete: fill us in on how you have been helping in eddie's case? >> we got a phone call about six months ago from the former police comuretion bernie kerik is there any way we can help out? besides raising funds to help with the legal defense, we have been able to kind of dive in to this case and use our voice and promote within our community what's going on. in the beginning you are supporting a brand an apparel brand is supporting someone who is accused of
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killing a child. we have all come to find out that that was a false narrative. pete: yes. >> while there are other brands out there like nike supporting people like colin kaepernick a man-child, we choose our brand ambassadors who are actual heroes. that he was why we are extremely excited to work with eddie and hoping he can get out of the navy as soon as possible so we can get back to work as well. pete: eddie, what would be the quickest and best course of action for you right now to end it the way you want it to be ended? >> to let me retire november 30th. pete: without this board taking the trident and this something the commander-in-chief of course through his prerogatives has the ability to do? pete: all right. well, the fight continues. we will keep you post you had. it will be interesting to watch. thank you, gentlemen. thank you for your service and tyler as well. thank you for your service. >> thank you and for yours. pete: ed, have you headlines. >> second suspect in custody. charged with kidnapping aniah blanchard in alabama last month. the first suspect was arrested last week. a witness testified seeing
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him force blanchard into her car at a gas station where she was last seen. blanchard is the stepdaughter of the ufc heavyweight walt big ticket harris. 5-year-old boy thrown from the mall of america ball don't back at school. according to go fund me page he loves going to kindergarten with his twin brother 8 months after the
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